Yes, I know about Allred, a real piece of work. Someone I do not  trust
and regard as disreputable ( to use language calculated not to offend
even when I would very much like to offend ). 
 
Trouble is, there now is bimbo # 5 and God knows who else. This  sounds
a lot like Wm Clinton.. Also, I heard some of Cain's press conference  in
which he denied the allegations, all of them. My impression, for what
it may be worth, he was lying through his teeth.
 
 
But let's wait for # 5 to spill her guts and see if there are others who  
come forward.
 
Seems as if Cain has a thing for white blondes.
This ought to play real good in the South. 
And in blue collar neighborhoods elsewhere.
 
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
 
 
 
11/8/2011 8:45:07 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected]  
writes:

The lady who is now represented by Gloria Allred is  a former CBS employee 
and Bill Curtis of WBBM Chicago said on WLS Chicago  radio Monday morning 
that he would not be surprised if she were in a car with  Herman Cain that the 
situation might have even been reversed, and that she had  "quite a 
history."

David

 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do is a  swine."--P. J.  O’Rourke 


On 11/8/2011 11:55 AM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
( Breaking story in W Times, a 5th  woman has made accusations... )
 
     (http://www.politico.com/)    
Herman Cain's next  move
By:  Roger  Simon
November 8, 2011 04:49 AM EST     
The woman stands in front of the  artillery snouts of the TV cameras and 
nervously reads her statement.  She is dressed and groomed carefully. She has 
put on black-rimmed  glasses, which give her a slightly professorial air. 
“He put his hands on my legs, under  my skirt and reached for my genitals,”
 she says. “He also grabbed my  head and brought it toward his crotch.” 
This is Sharon Bialek speaking of  Herman Cain. 
Cain is running for the Republican  nomination for president of the United 
States. He has previously been  accused by three unnamed women of sexual 
harassment. 
Bialek’s accusation is different,  however. If true, the allegations would 
appear to be sexual assault,  usually defined as “when someone touches any 
part of another person’s  body in a sexual way, even through clothes, without 
that person’s  consent.” 
Cain’s encounter with Bialek in the  front seat of his car allegedly took 
place 14 years ago. And while  Bialek says she told two people about the 
event shortly after it  occurred, she never went to the police or filed a civil 
 
suit. 
Which is not all that surprising.  Many women are filled with a deep sense 
of embarrassment or shame  after such incidents and often end up at least 
partly blaming  themselves. 
Today, however, Bialek blames  Herman Cain. 
“Come clean,” Bialek says to Cain  via the TV cameras. 
She says she is speaking out now in  order to become a “face and voice … 
to all women who don’t come  forward out of fear.” 
The Cain campaign issues a  statement denying Bialek’s accusations moments 
after she is done  making them on TV. “All allegations of harassment against 
Mr. Cain are  completely false; Mr. Cain has never harassed anyone,” the 
statement  says. 
It then goes on to champion Cain’s  9-9-9 tax plan, as if that will get 
things back on track. 
Of Bialek, little is known — though  much probably will be as the press 
burrows deep into her past. She has  been identified to America by her 
high-profile lawyer, Gloria  Allred. 
Allred says Bialek is a “registered  Republican” and “a college graduate.”
 She is the “mother of a  13-year-old son” and was the “co-host of a 
cooking show” on  television. She also worked for Revlon, WGN radio and CBS 
radio, all  in Chicago, and the National Restaurant Association’s Educational  
Foundation. She had been fired from that last job and went to  Washington, 
D.C., to seek Cain’s help in getting a new job. 
Allred does not say it, because she  does not need to, but Bialek is white 
and Herman Cain is  black. 

How or if that will matter to people is not  known.Cain recently said of 
the attacks on him that “relative to the  left, I believe that race is a 
bigger driving factor. I don’t think  it’s a driving factor on the right.” 
Toure, a black author who recently  published the book “Who’s Afraid of 
Post-Blackness?” said recently on  MSNBC’s “The Last Word” with Lawrence O’
Donnell that Cain has indulged  in “moments of minstrelsy” to appease white 
conservatives.  

Race was not mentioned during Bialek’s news conference.  Indignation was. 

“I want you, Mr. Cain, to come clean,” Bialek  said. “Just admit what you 
did. Admit you were inappropriate to  people, and then move forward.” 

But just what direction Cain  will now move in is not obvious. The most 
recent RealClearPolitics  average of leading polls shows him still at the front 
of the  Republican field, leading Mitt Romney 24.8 percent to 22.4 percent. 
 

Cain certainly looks to be in a tough spot, but allegations of  sexual 
impropriety — even when admitted — do not automatically end the  career of a 
popular politician. 

In 2003, less than a week  before a special election for governor, 
first-time candidate Arnold  Schwarzenegger was accused in the Los Angeles 
Times in 
chilling detail  by women who said he had groped and touched them. 

The number  of accusers eventually rose to 15 and Schwarzenegger was forced 
to  say, “Yes, I have behaved badly sometimes, … and I have done things  
that were not right, which I thought then was playful. But I now  recognize 
that I have offended people.” 

And Arnold  Schwarzenegger won the election and became governor of the 
largest  state in the land. 

In January 1992, Bill Clinton was accused  by Gennifer Flowers of having 
had a 12-year affair with her. Clinton  denied it and his campaign viciously 
attacked Flowers, though after  his reelection he was forced to admit having 
had a sexual encounter  with her. 

The other sexual accusations against Clinton came  after he was safely in 
his second term, though the Monica Lewinsky  affair led to his impeachment by 
the House and acquittal by the  Senate. 

While the scandal was raging, I asked Clinton’s press  secretary, Mike 
McCurry, what the image of the presidency had become  in such sexually explicit 
times. 

“It has been a result of TV,”  McCurry said, “which brings you [to] 
people, warts and all. The  president is now in your living room. Sports heroes 
used to be larger  than life, but in the TV era they have been reduced to 
human beings.  Everyone is stripped down to their skivvies pretty quickly these 
 
days.” 

Some survive these moments, and some do not. Being a  celebrity helps. We 
have grown used to being forced to imagine our  celebrities in their 
skivvies. (“Usually briefs,” Clinton said in 1994  when asked at a town hall 
whether he wore boxers or briefs.)  

But Herman Cain is no Bill Clinton and no Arnold  Schwarzenegger. He is 
just Herman Cain. That has been enough to get  him to the front of a very weak 
field. Where he goes from here may not  be forward. 

--  
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
_<[email protected]>_ (mailto:[email protected]) 
Google  Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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